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Brick walls are there for a reason. They give us a chance to show how badly we want something.

Grab your box of Kleenex because you’re gonna cry, most of the time they’ll be tears of laughter, but some of them will be from heart ache. OH! and Don’t forget the pen and paper, because you’ll want to take notes. Professor Pausch is taking the stage for The Last Lecture.

Pausch covers the elephant in the room in his opening paragraphs:

I have an engineering problem. While for the most part I’m in terrific physical shape, I have ten tumors in my liver and I have only a few months left to live.

I am a father of three young children, and married to the woman of my dreams. While I could easily feel sorry for myself, that wouldn’t do them, or me, any good.

So many things in this book are deeply inspirational, and that’s no surprise; he’s dying from cancer and that’s given him a chance to step back and say, “What legacy am I leaving?” Much of them are simple concepts like, “Tell the truth, it’s not only morally right but efficient.” Some are more profound like, “one customer-service decision over a ten-dollar salt and pepper shaker [ended] up earning Disney more than $100,000.” But all of them are worth saving, writing down, reciting, and implementing, because Randy Pausch lived a life that saw almost all of his childhood dreams come true.

My Childhood Dreams

Being in zero gravity

Playing in the NFL

Authoring an article in the World Book encyclopedia

Being Captain Kirk

Winning stuffed animals

Being a Disney Imagineer

My mom turned me onto this book a couple weeks ago when I was telling her about whatever book I was reading, and she told me she’d just read a really great book. Now, my mom doesn’t say a book is great very often… in fact, a lot of the time, they barely make much of a blip on her radar. I’m not saying she’s a picky reader or critical, but when she ONE remembers a book and talks about it and TWO applies the “great” stamp to it, it’s a book guaranteed worth reading.

And I was definitely NOT disappointed. The copy I have came from the library, but I will be buying my own copy. I wish I could keep this one though… it smells lovely, reminiscent of the Viewfinder we played with when we were kids :-)

Send Out Thin Mints

As part of my responsibilities, I used to be an academic reviewer. That meant I’d have to ask other professors to read densely written research papers and review them. It could be tedious, sleep inducing work. So I came up with an idea. I’d send a box of Girl Scout Thin Mints with every paper that needed reviewed. “Thank you for agreeing to do this,” I’d write. “The enclosed Thin Mints are your reward. But no fair eating them until you review the paper.”

… I’ve found Thin Mints are a great communication tool. THey’re also a sweet reward for a job well done.

Okay, so… Publishers and authors: I now expect Thin Mints with each book you’re wanting reviewed :-D It was worth a try! Chapter 55 says, “Sometimes, all you have to do is ask.“

Long and short of it: The Last Lecture is full of common sense, community sense, wisdom that is worth reading and re-reading. It’d make a great belated Father’s Day present, or a gift to anyone, including yourself. I give The Last Lecture by Randy Pausch5 out of 5 stars.